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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 27, 1936)
JfEDFORD MAIL TRTBUXE, MEDFOKD. OREGON. MONDAY. JANUARY 27, 1936. PAGE TI7REE BALLOT BOXES GO FOR SPECIAL VOTE Tht ftberlff'a office this morning Urtd distributing the billot boxes end pouches to outlying precincts for the special state election Friday. January SI. Distribution to preclncta on the floor of the valley, and easily aooesslble precincts, will be made Thursday, Polling places are practically the same as in the 1034 election, and few changes are seen In election boards. Four measures are on the regular special election ballot. They are the sales tax to provide funds for pay ment of old age pensions; to change the primary election date from May to September, compulsory student fees, and a bill for raising the pay of members of the legislature. Voters In the Med ford precincts will have a special ballot for voting on civil service for the fire depart ment. The little Interest so far manifest In Jackson county, rests In the sales tax. Jackson county was one of the two counties In the state fa voring a sales tax the last time It wss before the voters. Many old age pension beneficiaries are opposed to the present sales tsx. causing many voters to hold "If they are against tt, why should we be for It." if the sales tax Is defeated, the state will have no source from which to pay the old age pensions. A light vote Is forecast In Jackson county. . 4 BIRTHS Bom. to Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Davis, 6 Everett Court, Medford, a boy. weighing 7 pounds 13 ounces. Janu ary 34. at the Community hospital. Schilling PUREVNILliA. retains its delicate flavor fi in all FROZEN Y DESSERTS Society and Clubs By JANKTWRAY SMITH and their husbands. Arrangementa were in the hands of Bernlce Wilson Blanche Rinabarger, and Mrs. Thompson, of Richfield, Wisconsin, was a special guest for the evening. Cards were played during tns eve ning. Kid" Party Celebrates Birthday Mrs. Cordy Sunderman entertained i with a "kid" party Saturday evening In honor of her husband's birthday. all guests coming In appropriate cos- tume. Costume prizes were awarded to Mrs.-Harry Plnneo and Lem Massle. I Children's games were the diversion 1 for the evening, which ended with a I midnight supper and presentation of gifts to the honor guest. Quests for the evening were Mr. and iMra. Alton Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Earl win Cutler, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Llndley, Mr. and Mrs. Lem Mas sle, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Metcalf, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Plneo, Mr. and Mrs. Trultt Cantrell and Mr. and Mrs. Larry Espey. The evening waa In the nature of double celebration, as It was also the birthday of Mr. Anderson. Neighborhood Club Takes In New Members Mrs. Lawrence Pennington was hos tess recently to the Oak Grove Neigh borhood club at her home on the Jacksonville highway, at which time two new members, Mrs. W. Fllnn and Mrs. Brill, were taken Into the club. Bridge, sewing and chatting took up the afternoon, the business meet ing being followed by refreshments served by the hostess, assisted by her daughter, Mrs. Budd Gall. Visitors for the afternoon were Mesdames Gardiner, Jamleson and Gall. Next meeting, whose hostess will be Mrs. A. Brewold, was announced for Feb. 5. Mrs. Skinner Guest of Honor Honoring Mrs. R. A. Skinner, ladles of the West Side district entertained with a tea last Friday afternoon at the schoolhouse. The Skinners have moved to Medford this week-end Features pf the afternoon were two vocal solos by Mrs. Chester Wendt, and piano solos by Miss Constance Moore, who also accompanied Mrs. Wendt. Mrs. E. F. Leach presided at the tea-table. Gleaner Class Has Meeting Members of the Gleaner class of the First Baptist church were enter tained recently by Mesdames Clem Parker and Kellogg for the Januaiy meeting. A contest program and two birthday cakes were features of the afternoon. Pythian Sisters Planning Card Party - Members of the Pythian Sisters club will be hostesses for a public card party tomorrow evening at the clubroom at eight o'clock. Auction bridge and pinochle will be played and refreshments served. Mrs. Severance Hostess to Club Mrs. Florence Severance was hostess to the Jacksonville Home Economies club at her home for a recent meet ing, at which time a constructive pro gram for the year waa outlined. The treasurer's report showed the clubs finances In fine condition. After a social hour, refreshments were served by the hostess, assisted by Mrs. Ruth Hoffman. It was an nounced that the next meeting will be at the home of Mrs. E. H. Nleder meyer Feb. 1.3. Guests for the afternoon were Miss Clara Hanley and Mesdames Mattie Mechem, Fay Peters, Ernest Langtey, Addle Marsh, Rlva Henspeter, Edna Jones, George Flake, Anna Wendt. Louise Brockway, Anna Hartley, Em ma Conger and Ora Nledermeyer. Benefit Card Party Being Planned by B. P. W. Mrs. Margaret Fabrlck will be hos tess for the benefit card party, be ing arranged for tomorrow night by the Business and Professional Wo men's club, at her home, 106 Craltr Lave Ave. Assisting Mrs. Fabrlck arc Miss Barbara Drury, Mrs. Bertha Glas gow and Mrs. Maude Snider. Playing, which will consist of al. games desired, will start at eight o' clock. Members are requested to call Miss entry at 62 or Mrs. Fabrlck tor reservations. Annual Dinner . Given By Club OAK GROVE. (Spl.) One of the most enjoyable affairs of the season was the annual dinner given by the Oak Grove Neighborhood club to members and their husbsnds In the school dining room Friday evening The thirty-two guests were seated at long tables. Bridge, games and stunts took up the remainder of the evening. Miss Warner Back From Visit Returning this morning was Miss Margaret -Warner, who left last Wed nesday for Santa Rosa, Calif., to spend several days as the guest of Mr. and Mrs, W. B. Forsyth, of that city. Mrs. Hasklna Leaves For South Mrs. Leon B. Hasklns left on the evening train Saturday for Berkeley where she will spend a few weeks a the guest of her sister and brother-in-law, Mr, and Mrs. George John son. House warming For Vaughn Quackenbushes A surprise house warming for Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Quackenbush, their new home on the South Pacific highway, was arranged Saturday eve ning by ladles of the Wenonah club t HATTIE R. JONES OF BUTTE FALLS TAKEN BY DEATH Hattle Ruperts Whaley Jones, 40, 1 resident of Butte Falls. Oregon, since 1038, passed away suddenly at her home In that city,' January 36, from sudden heart attack. Mrs. Jones waa born at Mansfield, Missouri, April 34, 1895. Although she had been falling and under a physician's care for some time, her death was unexpected and came as a distinct shock to her fam ily and friends. She leaves to mourn her departure. besides her husband. Earl E. Jones, three children. Aurdnall Rogers. Wichita. Kansas: Perry and Irene Rogers. Butte Falls; her parents. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Whsley, Eagle Point, Ore.; four sisters and three brothers, Mrs. Essie Poole and Todd Whaley of Butte Falls: Mrs. Alice Hurst, Mrs. Marcla Greb, Rosa Whaley, Wayne and Bert Whaley, and one uncle, Jesse Mlsner, all of Eagle Point. Funeral services will be conducted from the Presbyterian church at Butte Falls. Wednesday afternoon at o'clock, with Rev. Sinlti. -officiating. Interment will take place In the Butte Falls cemetery. Perl Funeral home In charge. ROOSEVELT'S VETO IS OVERRIDDEN BY VOTE OTP 19 (Continued Pro to page One.) ENCYGI QUARTET Wilson Neathamer, Newton Jami son, Harlan Pelcher and Don Camp bell, Wlmer district youths, entered pleas of guilty In circuit court to burglary not In a dwelling, and were granted six months suspended sen tences by Judge H. D. Norton. The court. In admonishments from the bench, cautioned the youths on the error of their ways. None had been In trouble before. The quartet was charged In a com plaint signed by George Beers, with breaking and entering his garage, os tensibly to steal gasoline, but taking other articles, all of which were re turned or paid for. The youths entered pleas of guilty In Justice court and were bound over to the grand Jury. majority, voted 76 to IS to override the chief executive's veto. The house had smashed It down Test week 324 to 01. The two ballots, which saw top Democratic leadera go against the President on the 10-year-old Issue, put the 42, 401,000,000 bond payment plan on the statute books. They raised also for Mr. Roosevelt and his financial advisers the serious problem of finding funds to meet the new drain on the treasury. New Tax Question waits Whether new taxes will be asked to meet this extra budget outlay esti mated to require an Immediate ex penditure of $1,000.000.000 remained to be seen. The new law Itself merely author lzes an appropriation of S3.337.000. 000 and makee. available $254,000,000 already In the bonus certificate fund to pay the bonus 1948 maturity value in $50 cashable bonds. An actual appropriation wilt have to be made later In aome regular supply bill. President Roosevelt did not men tion taxes In his brief veto message but said his objections were the same now aa they were last May when he vetoed the Patman Infla tionary-payment measure. Loud applause greeted the an nouncement of the vote by Vice- President Garner who before giving It congratulated the senate on Its "good health." He noted that for the first time since he became pre siding officer the entire membership was recorded on a roll can. While Democratic leaders In both houses have contended o new taxes would be required, Secretary Mor centhau has cautioned payment of the bonus would Increase to perhaps $11,300,000,000 the amount of new treasury financing In the next 17 months. $5,800,000,000 of this being a refunding operation. Also he fore cast a new public debt high ap proaching $36,000,000,000. The bill enacted today was offered after weeka of secret negotiations be tween bonus leaders In and about congress. Senator Harrison (D.. Miss.) Introduced It on behalf of himself and Senators Byrnes D.. 5. C): Stel- wer (R., Ore.) and Clark (D. Mo.) It provides for payment In bonds that could be cashed after June 16 next at looal postoffloas, or held for per cent Interest for nine years. The bill passed the senate originally 74 to 10 and the house 346 to as. The original bonus law providing for Issuance of adjusted service cer tificates In 1925 and maturing In 1043 based on $1 a day for contin ental and $1.35 a day for foreign service plus 35 per cent and Interest at 4 per cent compounded annually went on the books In 1034 over President Coolldge's veto. The house passed It 313 to 78 over the veto and the senate 59 to 16. Twenty-one senators who last May voted to sustain the president's dis approval of the Patman currency expansion payment bill voted today to override the bond-payment veto. They were: Democrats Ashurst, Bailey, Bark ley, Chavez, Cooltdpe. Dleterich. Gore, Ouffey, Harrison, Lonergan, O'Mahoney. Plttman, Pope, Rad cllffe, Robinson and Walsh 16. Republicans Austin, Barbour, McNary, Metcalf. and White 5. Twelve more than the necessary two-thirds were mustered by the pro-bonus group todnv. WASHINGTON. Jan. 37. (AP) The senate vote which put the $2,491,000,000 bonus payment bill on the statute books: For passage over President Roose velt's veto: Democrats Adams. Ashurst. Bach- man, Bailey, Bankneaa, isantiey. Bilbo. Black. Bone. Bulow. Byrnes. Caraway. Chavet. Clark, Coolldge. Cop eland, Costlgan. Dleterlch. Dona hey. Dulfy. George. Gore, Guffey. Harrison. Hatch, Holt. Lewis, Logan. Lonergan, Maloney, McAdoo, McCnr ran, McGUl. McKellar, Ml n ton, Moore, Murphy. Murray, Neely, O'Mahoney, Overton, Plttman, Pope, R&dcllffe,' Reynolds, Robinson, Rus sell, Schwellenbach, Sheppsrd, Smith, Thomas. Okla.; Thomas, Utah; Tram mell, Truman, Van Nuys, Walsh, Wheeler. Total Democrats 57. Republicans voting to override Carey, Davis, Dickinson, Frazler, Austin, Barbour. Borah, Capper, Gibson, McNary, Metcalf, Norbeck, Ncrrls, Nye, Steiwer, White. Total Republicans 10. Farmer Labor Benson, Ships teed. Total 2. Progressive La,Follette. Grand total 70. Against overriding the veto: Democrats Brown, Bulk ley, Burke, Byrd, Con nail y, Fletcher, Gerry, Glass, Hayden, King. Tydlngs, Wag ner. Total Democrats 13. Republicans against overriding: Couzens, Hale, Hastings, Johnson, Kcyes. Townsend, Vandenberg. Total 7. Orand total against overriding,. 19, There la one vacancy In the senate. Mothers ! In treating children's colds, don't take lC chances.. use If W VapoRub U4M . I f Y A 1 I SI f Kr. FIRST ripened in the sunshine.. and picked leaf by leaf from the right part of the stalk when fully ripe. Picking lof fobucco In Ih "Bright" tobacco fieWi of Virginia and the Caroinof. cflHTTl THEN each day's picking cured right by the farmer ... at the right time and in the right way ... no "splotching"or brittleness, but every leaf of good color and flavor. FINALLY bought in the open market. ..re-dried fit storage... then packed in wooden hogsheads to age and mellow for two years or more un til free from harshness and bitterness. That's what we mean by mild, ripe tobacco. And that's the kind of to bacco we use to give Chesterfields their milder, better taste, 1 Hogthtads of leaf fofaocco "ageing" for two yean in t forage warehouses. V i I Tp of barn una1 for "fut curing" laf tobacco. for mildness , for bctlcr taste O t?36. KGCftT I MTf M lOtATCO CO. WHAT ON EARTH HAS A PATCH TEST TO DO WITH MY COMPLEXION? f 'V EVERYTHING. MY DEAR. LISTEN V n Now I know which soap is gentlest for my skin t was to mixed up, so confused by ill 1 the cttims, 1 really didn't know which complexion loap to buyl I spent so much money for so&ps that were sup posed to be good, hut not one of them really helped my skin ! "Then I read about the 'patch' tests doctors were making on the skins of hundreds of women. They prwtd that Lifebuoy is far and away the mildest of ill the well-known soaps tested actu ally more than 20 milder than many so-called 'beauty soaps.' "Of course, I'd been bathing with Lifebuoy to protect against 'B.O.' (bcJy cJir). Well, I tried it for a complexion soap and, believe me, Jane, it's done venders for my skinl Made it feel so soft. Itch so much fresher and dearer! "And Lifebuoy's grand for the hands! I keep s cake handy in the kitchen as well as the bathroom. John says my hands haven't been so smooth and white since before we started housekeeping! 1 certainly advise every woman who wants nice hands and a nice complexion to use Lifebuoy and Lifebuoy onlyl" Watch outl Stuffy rooms, warm clothing make "B.O." (Wjr ejtr) more noticeable! Bathe regularly with Lifebuoy, It de odorizes the pores. Gives abundanc lather in hardest water. Its own dean scent quickly vanishes as you rinse. Appnttd h GteJ HtuikiiplH Btfdm The 'grocei 'wk i owned fa 'Lullaby toababyleji in his store Her mother "parked" eight weeks old Catherine, napping peacefully in her carriage, in a corner before she began her round of the shelves. Now she was ready to leave. Across the street a dis play of millinery beckoned. Tom Milton volunteered to "keep an eye" on Catherine. Five minutes later the baby awoke and voiced a wail of protest; The Safeway mats jiggled the carriage. He mxde funny faces. But the 'falls mounted in volume. Resolutely he lifted the pink bundle into his arms and began to softly mumble a lullaby. He kept it up until Catherine's mother returned. Back once more in her carriage the baby smiled at Tom. "After all," she might have been saying, "it's a gen tleman's business to amuse a lady, isn't it?" This story of a Safeway groctr and tht baby he cared for Is true. Tie mother told us about it in a letter. Only the names of this Safeway man and the baby have been changed to protect their rightful privacy yOUR SAFEWAY GROCER welcomes the kind of chance that came to Tom Milton. Such happenings mean new friends for him and for his store. He knows that being a good neighbor is just as important as saving his customers money on food (and as important as paying back to the farmer more of each retail food dollar). You see, your Safeway grocer has tackled a job that the people want done. That job is to eliminate needless handling charges to cut down wasteful costs in be tween farm and market. Working alone, your Safeway grocer could not get ery far with such a job. That's why he has a family to help him Safeway buyers, warehousemen, truckers and home economists, as well as grocerymcn. This team of food experts can save money in food distribution. So your Safeway grocer can sell his foods at lower retail prices. Thus his customers can afford to buy more. And he can return to the farmer a far bigger share of each food dollar than was possible before the Safeway method was discovered. Also, he can earn a better income than other men doing similar work . . . M. L Bean, Division Manager for Safeway Stores, 239 South East Salmon Street, Portland, Oregon. How much did you spend for food latrt month? Check up. Then trade at your neighborhood Safeway grocer's for 30 days and compare your total savingsl Safeway En tilt idremMmtat coprriibi 1936 Stfcwir Store. Inc. THI SAFEWAY GROCER'S I soil only foods of a quality I tCin personally recommend I tell you truthfully the grade and condition of all my foods I guarantee full-weight measure I refund to ruMomers the full price of any purchase which proves unsatisfactory GOOD NEIGHBOR CODE I murk my prices openly and plainly so that all customers are treated alike I wait on children in their turn, pay ing special attention to their needs 1 try to keep my store clean, well lighted and orderly at all times I try to be a gootl neighbor to all who enter my store